
GóbéfestCelebrating the music, culture, food and drink of Transylvania and the Carpathian Basin
Friday 24-Sunday 26 May 2019
Fri 12noon-11pm, Sat 11am-11pm and Sun 11am-10pm
Albert Square, Manchester M2 5DB
Free
This May sees the return of the UK’s only free weekend festival to celebrate in riotous colour the arts, culture, food and drink of the fabled-region of Transylvania.
Last
year’s event in Manchester’s central Albert Square, saw 17,000
adventurous revellers put their best foot forward to
try out traditional folk dancing and soak up the sounds of a Celtic
Transylvanian punk band, shake hands with one of Hungary’s biggest pop
stars and sample delicacies including the spit-roasted sweet treat chimney cake and
lángos (fried dough served with various toppings such as crème frèche
and garlic).
This
year’s free event also includes a family activity tent running arts and
music workshops throughout the weekend, enchanting puppet shows, a
makers’ craft market, folk dance demonstrations, small-batch craft food samplingand many other musical and culinary delights.The Maros Ensemble, from
Széklerland
in Transylvania, celebrated their 60th anniversary in 2016 and promise
to showcase “traditional dances from East-Transylvanian villages
inhabited by Romanians, Hungarians, Germans and Gypsies”.
Whilst Bohemain Betyars are bring their self-described “speed-folk freak-punk” with Hungarian, Balkanic and Gipsy elements to the UK for the first time.
Other main stage highlights over the three day event include
Mátyás Király Citerazenekar, a young people’s zither orchestra from Transylvania, the return of Transylvanian/Celtic Pogues fans, Selfish Murphy, and an operetta performance from Annamari Dancs (Budapest Operetta Theatre) & Péter Laki.
Góbéfest
was established in 2017 to celebrate the little-known culture and
traditions of the Székler people – a minority group of ethnic Hungarians living
in Transylvania, which is part of Romania.
A Góbé is a friendly word for
a ‘crafty Székely’.
Event
organiser Ottilia Ördög is herself a Székely Hungarian, now settled in UK for
almost 30 years and working as a cultural leader. She said: “Góbéfest
brings the magical sounds, sights and smells of one of Europe’s most
mythologised and unspoilt regions to the centre of Manchester.
“The weekend will serve up a family friendly and unashamedly enthusiastic mix of music, dance, arts and crafts and food and drink, offering just a glimpse of the true flavours of Transylvania and the Carpathian Basin.“